From the NY Times:
Ore., May 11 — In a few weeks, a 26,000-pound machine will begin shooting ions into silicon wafers like lightning bolts, one process in hundreds that silicon must undergo during its transformation into a computer chip.
The immense machine, called an implanter, will be a small piece of the Intel Corporation's newest semiconductor factory here, scheduled to begin mass production early next year. But today, a dozen technicians, shrouded in white protective suits from head to foot, swarmed around and inside the machine, painstakingly piecing it together.
"This is how you spend $7.5 billion in capital," Gerald Marcyk, Intel's director of component research, said after a rare tour of the new factory, 14 miles west of Portland. That is how much Intel estimates it will spend this year on capital expenses, in addition to $4.2 billion in research and development.
Similar scenes of ambitious construction will be played out in semiconductor plants throughout the world in the new few years, as chip makers prepare for the first radical change in production techniques since the mid-1990's.
The change in processing technology involves increasing the size of the round silicon wafers from which chips are culled. Instead of the current standard diameter of 200 millimeters (about 8 inches, the size of a salad plate), chip makers are moving toward wafers of 300 millimeters (roughly 12 inches). The larger wafers can yield more than twice as many chips, achieving an economy of scale that Intel says will save 30 percent in manufacturing costs for each wafer.
Engineers have worked to enlarge wafers since the 1960's, when chips were cut from pieces of silicon the size of quarters. As the wafer size increases, so does the difficulty of getting perfect chips from that wafer every time, and so does the ability of equipment makers to design tools to handle the wafers. As a result, tool makers can charge tremendous amounts for customized machines.
With the entry of Intel, the world's largest chip maker, into the 300-millimeter market, the changeover to the new process is sure to accelerate. I.B.M. led the industry by developing the 200-millimeter wafers in 1994, much as Intel led the 150-millimeter transition a decade before. Each company learned its lesson, choosing to let others take the development lead that time and remain close behind. I.B.M. is building a $2.5 billion 300-millimeter plant in East Fishkill, N.Y., that is expected to be in full production by 2003, a year after Intel's.
"The company that drives the move to a new wafer size ends up paying the bill for much of the tooling development; then the rest of the industry benefits from it," an I.B.M. spokesman, William O'Leary, said.
This time, Intel and I.B.M. left the trailblazing role to Semiconductor300, a joint venture between Motorola and Infineon Technologies,the semiconductor unit of Siemens. In 1999, the venture. financed by the German government, became the first to produce working memory chips from 300-millimeter wafers and sold them in small numbers.
Dr. Ulrich Schumacher, Infineon's president and chief executive, said he welcomed Intel's entrance into 300-millimeter wafer production because it could be expected to force more equipment makers to build appropriate tools, driving prices down. "This is a very important push for equipment suppliers," he said, "because now it is not only just Infineon and Motorola, but also the mighty Intel."
Today, more than two dozen 300- millimeter plants are under construction around the world. In the first three months of this year, chip makers undertook 300-millimeter development projects worth $35 billion in construction and equipment, according to Semiconductor Equipment and Materials International, a trade group for tool makers.
But only Semiconductor300, the joint venture, and TaiwanSemiconductor have put 300-millimeter-produced chips on the market. With demand slumping in many segments of the industry, chip makers are gambling that sales will improve by the time the plants are ready. A factory can cost billions of dollars to maintain, even when running below full capacity.
Intel has warned that its famously high profit margins will suffer in coming months, as demand for its semiconductors remains weak. But Intel executives remain bullish on their long-term potential. The factory here produced a limited number of its first working microprocessors on the new wafer size in March. The chips were the world's first to feature the next generation of 0.13-micron circuit lines, which allows Intel to cram more transistors onto each chip. Intel says the combination of the two technologies will quadruple production efficiency.
Even while construction continues, the factory here is already preparing for the drive to full-scale production. As technicians assembled the implanter in one bay, an automated trolley system in the next bay whisked a wafer across the ceiling, then lowered it to a tool where workers awaited its arrival. The tool deposited oxides onto the 300-millimeter wafer, then sent it along to the next step.
"From a long-term perspective," said Mark Edelstone, managing director of semiconductor research for Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, after touring the factory, "there's no question now about Intel's core competency. It raises the bar significantly
IMO--all the fabs must follow or fall.
fred |